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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Brooks, Gregg R, Doyle, Larry J, McNeillie, Jennifer I
Format: Dataset Open Access
Language:en
Published: PANGAEA 1986
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.788166
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author Brooks, Gregg R
Doyle, Larry J
McNeillie, Jennifer I
author_facet Brooks, Gregg R
Doyle, Larry J
McNeillie, Jennifer I
collection Datos científicos de ciencias marinas y ambientales
contents The interval between 488.2 and 513.7 m below seafloor at Deep Sea Drilling Project (DSDP) Site 615 is interpreted as a single carbonate gravity-flow deposit. The deposit has characteristics of both a debris flow and a high-density turbidity current. Comparison of the sedimentary constituents in 15 samples from this site with samples from 26 core tops from the upper West Florida continental slope and eastern Mississippi Fan shows many similarities. Shallow-water indicators, such as mollusk and echinoid fragments, occur in both suites of samples. The West Florida continental margin, therefore, is a potential provenance area. The Yucatan slope is also a possible source, but data from it are limited. The recognition of carbonate gravity-flow deposits intercalated within the Mississippi Fan refines our understanding of Pleistocene sedimentation within the Gulf basin. Deposition in the deep Gulf is dominated by the construction of the Mississippi Fan. However, this marine terrigenous depocenter is located between two large carbonate depocenters, the West Florida continental margin on the east and the Yucatan peninsula on the southwest. Periodically, the carbonate slope in these two regions fails, injecting carbonate gravity flows into the accreting terrigenous deep-sea fan.
format Dataset Open Access
id pangaea_https___doi_org_10_1594_PANGAEA_788166
institution PANGAEA
language en
publishDate 1986
publisher PANGAEA
record_format pangaea
spellingShingle Sediment constituents and quartz in the sand-sized fraction, West Florida slope and Mississippi Fan sediments
Brooks, Gregg R
Doyle, Larry J
McNeillie, Jennifer I
Deep Sea Drilling Project; DSDP
The interval between 488.2 and 513.7 m below seafloor at Deep Sea Drilling Project (DSDP) Site 615 is interpreted as a single carbonate gravity-flow deposit. The deposit has characteristics of both a debris flow and a high-density turbidity current. Comparison of the sedimentary constituents in 15 samples from this site with samples from 26 core tops from the upper West Florida continental slope and eastern Mississippi Fan shows many similarities. Shallow-water indicators, such as mollusk and echinoid fragments, occur in both suites of samples. The West Florida continental margin, therefore, is a potential provenance area. The Yucatan slope is also a possible source, but data from it are limited. The recognition of carbonate gravity-flow deposits intercalated within the Mississippi Fan refines our understanding of Pleistocene sedimentation within the Gulf basin. Deposition in the deep Gulf is dominated by the construction of the Mississippi Fan. However, this marine terrigenous depocenter is located between two large carbonate depocenters, the West Florida continental margin on the east and the Yucatan peninsula on the southwest. Periodically, the carbonate slope in these two regions fails, injecting carbonate gravity flows into the accreting terrigenous deep-sea fan.
title Sediment constituents and quartz in the sand-sized fraction, West Florida slope and Mississippi Fan sediments
topic Deep Sea Drilling Project; DSDP
url https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.788166